The Guardian (USA)

US entitled to $5.2m from Edward Snowden's book sales, court rules

- Reuters

The United States is entitled to more than $5.2m from former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s book royalties, a federal court ruled this week, according to the US Department of Justice.

In a statement, the department said the US district court for the eastern district of Virginia on Tuesday also ruled in favor of setting up a trust for the government for any future earnings from Snowden’s book, which had been the subject of a federal lawsuit.

A lawyer for Snowden did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In September 2019, the US government sued Snowden, who resides in Russia, over his publicatio­n of Permanent Record, a book which the United States says violated non-disclosure agreements he signed when working for the NSA and the CIA.

The United States alleges that Snowden published the book without first submitting it to US agencies for pre-publicatio­n review, in violation of agreements he signed when working for the agencies. US authoritie­s did not seek to block publicatio­n of Snowden’s book but rather to seize all proceeds.

Last December, a federal court in Virginia found that Snowden did breach his obligation­s to the CIA and NSA but reserved judgment on possible remedies. In an order issued on Tuesday, the court entered a judgment in the

US government’s favor for more than $5.2m.

The civil litigation over the book is separate from criminal charges prosecutor­s filed against Snowden under a 1917 US espionage law.

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